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A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques

After disulphide bonds are reduced with dithiothreitol, trans-3- (α-bromomethyl)-3’-[α- (trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (trans-QBr) alkylates a sulfhydryl group on receptors. The membrane conductance induced by this “tethered agonist” shares many properties with that induced by reversible agoni...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lester, HA, Krouse, ME, Nass, MM, Wassermann, NH, Erlanger, BF
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1980
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2215740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6246192
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author Lester, HA
Krouse, ME
Nass, MM
Wassermann, NH
Erlanger, BF
author_facet Lester, HA
Krouse, ME
Nass, MM
Wassermann, NH
Erlanger, BF
author_sort Lester, HA
collection PubMed
description After disulphide bonds are reduced with dithiothreitol, trans-3- (α-bromomethyl)-3’-[α- (trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (trans-QBr) alkylates a sulfhydryl group on receptors. The membrane conductance induced by this “tethered agonist” shares many properties with that induced by reversible agonists. Equilibrium conductance increases as the membrane potential is made more negative; the voltage sensitivity resembles that seen with 50 [mu]M carbachol. Voltage- jump relaxations follow an exponential time-course; the rate constants are about twice as large as those seen with 50 μM carbachol and have the same voltage and temperature sensitivity. With reversible agonists, the rate of channel opening increases with the frequency of agonist-receptor collisions: with tethered trans-Qbr, this rate depends only on intramolecular events. In comparison to the conductance induced by reversible agonists, the QBr-induced conductance is at least 10-fold less sensitive to competitive blockade by tubocurarine and roughly as sensitive to “open-channel blockade” bu QX-222. Light-flash experiments with tethered QBr resemble those with the reversible photoisomerizable agonist, 3,3’,bis-[α-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (Bis-Q): the conductance is increased by cis {arrow} trans photoisomerizations and decreased by trans {arrow} cis photoisomerizations. As with Bis-Q, ligh-flash relaxations have the same rate constant as voltage-jump relaxations. Receptors with tethered trans isomer. By comparing the agonist-induced conductance with the cis/tans ratio, we conclude that each channel’s activation is determined by the configuration of a single tethered QBr molecule. The QBr-induced conductance shows slow decreases (time constant, several hundred milliseconds), which can be partially reversed by flashes. The similarities suggest that the same rate-limiting step governs the opening and closing of channels for both reversible and tethered agonists. Therefore, this step is probably not the initial encounter between agonist and receptor molecules.
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spelling pubmed-22157402008-04-23 A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques Lester, HA Krouse, ME Nass, MM Wassermann, NH Erlanger, BF J Gen Physiol Articles After disulphide bonds are reduced with dithiothreitol, trans-3- (α-bromomethyl)-3’-[α- (trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (trans-QBr) alkylates a sulfhydryl group on receptors. The membrane conductance induced by this “tethered agonist” shares many properties with that induced by reversible agonists. Equilibrium conductance increases as the membrane potential is made more negative; the voltage sensitivity resembles that seen with 50 [mu]M carbachol. Voltage- jump relaxations follow an exponential time-course; the rate constants are about twice as large as those seen with 50 μM carbachol and have the same voltage and temperature sensitivity. With reversible agonists, the rate of channel opening increases with the frequency of agonist-receptor collisions: with tethered trans-Qbr, this rate depends only on intramolecular events. In comparison to the conductance induced by reversible agonists, the QBr-induced conductance is at least 10-fold less sensitive to competitive blockade by tubocurarine and roughly as sensitive to “open-channel blockade” bu QX-222. Light-flash experiments with tethered QBr resemble those with the reversible photoisomerizable agonist, 3,3’,bis-[α-(trimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene (Bis-Q): the conductance is increased by cis {arrow} trans photoisomerizations and decreased by trans {arrow} cis photoisomerizations. As with Bis-Q, ligh-flash relaxations have the same rate constant as voltage-jump relaxations. Receptors with tethered trans isomer. By comparing the agonist-induced conductance with the cis/tans ratio, we conclude that each channel’s activation is determined by the configuration of a single tethered QBr molecule. The QBr-induced conductance shows slow decreases (time constant, several hundred milliseconds), which can be partially reversed by flashes. The similarities suggest that the same rate-limiting step governs the opening and closing of channels for both reversible and tethered agonists. Therefore, this step is probably not the initial encounter between agonist and receptor molecules. The Rockefeller University Press 1980-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2215740/ /pubmed/6246192 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Lester, HA
Krouse, ME
Nass, MM
Wassermann, NH
Erlanger, BF
A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title_full A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title_fullStr A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title_full_unstemmed A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title_short A covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. Comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
title_sort covalently bound photoisomerizable agonist. comparison with reversibly bound agonists at electrophorus electroplaques
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2215740/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6246192
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